Exploring the dynamic nexus between renewable energy, poverty alleviation, and environmental pollution: fresh evidence from E-9 countries

The present study aims to scrutinize the long- and short-run relationship along with the direction of causality among environmental pollution (CO 2 ), renewable, non-renewable energy, income disparity, exchange rate, and poverty alleviation in E-9 countries of continent Asia, using a panel dataset f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2023-02, Vol.30 (10), p.25773-25791
Hauptverfasser: Amin, Asad, Wang, Zilong, Shah, Aadil Hameed, Chandio, Abbas Ali
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The present study aims to scrutinize the long- and short-run relationship along with the direction of causality among environmental pollution (CO 2 ), renewable, non-renewable energy, income disparity, exchange rate, and poverty alleviation in E-9 countries of continent Asia, using a panel dataset from 1990 to 2018. The current study used pooled mean group autoregressive distributed lag (PMG ARDL) and Dumitrescu-Hurlin (D-H) causality test after affirming a stable long-run association among environmental pollution and all the explanatory variables. However, ECM (error correction mechanism) was specified to explore short-run dynamics. The study’s outcomes confirmed strong co-integration among environmental pollution (CO 2 ), renewable, non-renewable energy, income disparity, exchange rate, and poverty alleviation. Moreover, uni (bi) directional causality runs from non-renewable energy, exchange rate, and income disparity (poverty alleviation and renewable energy) to environmental pollution (CO 2 ). Results also revealed that poverty alleviation, exchange rate, and renewable energy usage substantially negatively influence environmental pollution (CO 2 ). Contrarily, income disparities and non-renewable energy usage positively influence long- and short-run environmental pollution. Therefore, from the policy perspective, the current study focused on twofold; first, there is a desire to alleviate poverty, the decline in non-renewable energy use and income disparity among upper and lower-income quintiles. Second, boost exchange rate and renewable energy use to control environmental pollution in the described least developed countries (LDCs).
ISSN:1614-7499
1614-7499
DOI:10.1007/s11356-022-23870-4